-V- ¦ f -- ' ¦ ¦ - » ¦ _ ___ ^__ m JM . ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦ ¦ ^ ^ , M^^^ B^MMS>BS ^Mliy^^BE^^ BBE^E!EEEEfca3»Wa1Kltl , " . _ ^E^E^E^BBE«iEH ^ 2,(r ^elfar ooit ola —: ^- • —^ ^ ' y/ K & E SSIEuMSKEt Sm W ^ ¦ ^^^ggjrjr ^n^»TP ij!3J^ | Arm Announces New Officers Stan Rakowsky, ARM Presi- Dennis O' uonnell , Wayne Nolan , dent recentl y announced his 1969 Ernest Fucella; District 4, Dave •1970 slate of Executive Board Carr , Jim Gates , Fran De An* officers . Ed Litchko will serve drea; District 5 , Jim Carlin , Dave. as Vice President , Hugh Demp- Maddin , Tom Serian i. The 1969-1970 Judical Board sey as Treasurer and Mike Philincludes Stan Rakowsky, chair * lagalli as Secretary . Also elected at this time were man , Ed Litchko , Hugh DempExecutive Council members who sey, and Mike Pillagalli as stand will represent their district for ing members in addition to the the first semester . They are as district repre sentatives . These follows: District 1, Ron Kline * men are as follows: Paul Gero ?ob , Roger Savage , John McElure; sky, District 1; Tony Vigilant! , v District 2, Joe Zakorchemny , Jim District 2; Mark Harlow , District Fauth , Mike Brauner , District 3 3; John Haile , District 4; and Gar y June , District 5. Alternate board members are Mike Brauner and Jon Decker. Psych Lecture Series I B^P^^BHHHWI^^^^BBBBIH^^H^Wi^^^W^BH^^^^^^^^^^HWB^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Young Democ rats Present Robert P. Casey CAMPUS INTERVIEWS October 21, 1969 Dr. Merritt W . Sanders , Di» . U. S. General Accou nting rector of the Resear ch and EvalOffice—Accounti ng in mauation Center , has announced the lor speakers , dates , locations , and 10:00 AM.—Washi ngton , D.C. topics far the Central Pennsylvania Psychology Lecture SerOCTOBER 28, 1969 ies for this year . Now in its Brow «rd County Schools . All fourth year, the serie s is intenareas wi ll be employing ded for the student s and faculove r 1000 new teach ers. ties of the schools and any in10. A.M. — Port tauderdale , terested persons in the comFlorida munities , and is sponsored by November 5, 1969 BSC . Bucknell University , Ly- Neshaminy School District. coming college, and Susquehanna All are-as. University Psychology Depart1:30 P.M. — Langhorne , ments. Penns ylv ania. The first of the lectures was Novemb er 10, 1969 held at BSC on Oct . 8. Dr . Bd. of Natio nal Bank ExamVytautas Blellauskas , Xav ier iners . Any busine ss me for. Univers ity, was the speaker .The 10:00 A.M. — Phil adelphia , schedule for the remainder of this Pennsylvan ia year is as follows: NOVEMBER 12, 1969 Nov. 12 — Bucknell - Dr. North Ponn Schoo l Distri ct. Leonard Rosenbl um , State Universit y of New York — "Mother All areas. 1:30 P.M. — Lansdale PennInfant Relations and Infant At* sylvania . tachments in Monke ys." Nov. 19 — Susquehanna — November 18,1969 Dr . Allen M . Schneider , New Liberty Mut ual Insurence York Universit y — "the Effects Co. Any ma|or technical; of Neural Convulsions on MemnMvsellln g; Insid e |obs , ory Storage ." 10:30 A, M. Bala-Cynwyd , Dec. 10 — Lycoming — Dr . Penns ylva nia. Vernon C . Hall , Syracuse UniNovembe r 20, 1969 versity Topic to be announced . Chenango Porks Centra l Feb. 4 — Bloomsburg — Dr . Schools . All areas. Kenneth K, Brookshire , Frank 10:00 A.M.—Chena ngo Porks , lin and Marshall - "Metabolic New Yor k. and Experimental Factors in the December 2, 1969 Determination of Taste PreferFrederi ck Count y Bd. of Edences " ucetlon a real . Feb. 18 — Lycomin g — Dr .Al9:30 A. . M. - Frederick , lan Paivio, University of WesMaryla nd. tern Ontario — "Ima gery, Memory , and Lan guage." December 4, 1949 March 11 — Bucknell - Dr . Perni iybury Schoo l Distri ct. George A. Cicala , Universit y of iT?11 il0« f * ¦*• •¦^S Delawar e — " Parameters of A. lliOO A.M. - Fellsl neten, voidance Behavior. " Pennsylv ania. April 8 — Susquehanna —Dr. Decembe r 9, 1949 Jack Werboff, Universit y of ConBristol Tw p. School District . V necticut — "Antecedent Factors ~ " tt All areas. in Behavioral Development ," All liSO P,M. — Brlttol, Penn. . " lectures are to be held at 8 "Politics of 1968 unleashed a vote must be expanded to in- Shafer. He also stated that he declared clude the Democratic National would not sign the contrac t for Robert P. Casey, Pa. Auditor and State Committee s, lowering air pollution monitors untilpro pGenera l, in a speech to stu- of the votin g age to 18, and in- er and legal procedure is followdents and facult y in Hartllne last clusion of more 18-29 year olds ed. He said he would not be in positions of importance with- forced to sign by threats. Ear Thursday. lier in the evening he mentioned Casey, wh o iso tfen ment ioned in the Democratic Party. Answering questions following to a reporter that "t his contract as a democrat ic can did ate for Pa. Gov., or Senator in 1970, his speech Casey defended retain - has caused a good deal of airp ol. said , "The 1968 McCar thy cam- ing some delegates at lar ge at the lutlon ." paign unleashed a tremendous N at iona l C onvent ion, as Deak e Casey's appearance at BSC force , and the young people of Porter aimed pointed questions was sponsored by the BSC Young describ vividly at him. He also this nation....thls state , were beDemocr ats . He was introduced Leads Northrup ed the entire hind that force. by James Percy, YD Advisor, claiming that his contract a ff a i r , "I feel very ddeply the dlsenand Elme r Longenberg er, YD by the state hands were tied Atchantments , the f rustrat ions, the President . by appointed who torne y Gov. Is impatience of the young people of this countr y... the feeling amon g t hem that they can 't re ally have any Influence , or play any role in organised parties , and their feelings are in a consider able part based on fact/' he said. Casey advocated several "part y re f orms " that he believes Allstate American Van lines , a lates not ' only to trucking businecessar y to "assure the young truck ing company run entirely by ness but to black busin ess on a people of this state that they black personnel , has petitioned whole. The statement is as foU have a place within the part y to the Inter state Commerce Com-, lows : which I belong." During the month of October , mission for natio nal certifica Casey said, "if your youth 's 1960 tion, , the Interstate Commerce if certification is granted allegiance is to be to the demoCommission will rule on an apAllstate will be the only black crat ic party, then it must be an plication filed by a black tr uckoperated company seryln g on a open part y with mechanisms that ing firm to allow nat ional basis, it to become command youth 's respect/ ' the first national Person , Timoth y certificated owner of the car Among reforms he suggested rier of company , household goods ant icipated trouble In to opprocedure were , changes in the erate in the y histor rece iving the certification of the due , UA In which delegates to the The admi nistratio n has stt Democratic National Convention to "built " - In restrictions whieh forth a policy of "Black Caplimit the black , businessman 'sen- , are elected, such as reduction of tr y italism ** as a means of develop, into the national busines s ."to the number of delegates at large, ing the economics resources of attem pt euperceed to these reand equalit y of delegate votes, ¦ , communit y and there * the black str i ct i ons Person has Issued the , changes in the election laws of following statement which , (continued reen page eight) P. HI. Pa ., principal of one man cue tremen dous force," "Black Capitalism" Aids Black Community Campus In terv i ew s , f <>, sylvenle. FORUM LETTERS.... «,A Zrinat JK«ply Dear Colleague: You have written: "Tact and good taste normally prevent academic colleagues from carr ying their disa greements , into a public forum . " This will come as a distinc t sur pr ise to M r . P orter , who is under the impression that he has publicl y debated the Viet* nam Issue with you in the past. Further , it is a distorti on of the clear chronolo gical record to imply that you are simply defending yourself from aggres sion . It was you who first enter * ed the public forum with a shock* ing attack upon the motives , sin* cerit y and patriotic judgment of your colleagues . Your sur pr ise at my reply indicates that you had hoped to respond only to a stu* dent • surel y an unfair match? Apparently you may attack when you please , but if someone dares to respond he is guilty of tactless * ness , bad taste and a ggression. It is an interestin g set of rules . Instead of these nebulous standards , let us appl y the simple laws of elementary logic that pre vail amon g academics . For example , you cite the sup* port of Pham Van Dong for October 15 as if that made all support for it somehow Com* munist . Must I give up my considered moral judgment simply because a probable hypocrite (he is a Communist) pretend to agree with It for pro paganda purp oses? Clearly, the fallacy of identi * tyin g a position with one of its apparent holders and then auto * maticall y smearing anyone else who holds the same position , for whatever other reasons , is operatin g here . Again, we may apply the laws governing internal contradiction to your arguments on dissent and negotiations . You say you believe the countr y must unite without dissen t behind our supreme ru ler , the President. Then you make it clear that those who negotiate with aggressors are simply '*well meanin g liberals " learn. " But our who "never President is engaged in exactly those negotiations in Paris ; thus , you are dissentin g from his public stan ce, exactly the kind of disagreement which you say should not be allowed to divide our countr y. It Is clear that this dialogue could continu e endlessly. You had a chance , however , to en» gage your opposition • all of it , not j ust one re presentative • in public debate on October 15. The fact that you chose to conduct business as usua l on that day is the most telling commentar y that could be mad e . Therefore , I must refuse to continue the escalation of hostiliti es In the columns of this newspaper . John Mc Lau ghlin English Department ~~ Dear Editor: Dr. Gunther 's letter I n the October 1, Maroon and Gold is \powerful and logical statement supporting the war in Vietnam . As a fellow "ha wk" , althou gh only a student , I must defend him against Mr. Porter and Mr. McLaughlin. To begin with , nobody is label ing Mr. McLaughlin or anti-war protestors as Communists.. Mr. McLaughlin manufactured his own smear. One does not have to be Communist to support Communist causes , either inten tionally or unintentionall y. Peace is a persuasive word which draws idealists like a magnet , no mat ter what side they are on ideologically. Nevertheless , the purpose of the jDctober 15 Moratorium Is to force the Nixon Administr ation to pull-out of Vietn am no matter what the cost. The Communists are , therefore supported — if not in Vietnam , certa inly in Par is. Common sense tells that as the demand to buy something increases so doesthe selling price. I n this case, the buyer is Pres ident Nixon and the seller is Han oi. Why should the Communist mass media use propagand awhen the truth serves equally well at ttme g ? American demon strators are , indeed , playing the role of the Thore z demonstr ators even though many are doing so unwittingly. Hopefully , the ma* jority of people in this country and their president will have the fortitude to withstand the Ides of October . WAR J USTIFIE D The Vietnam war is "just ified and humanitarian ," and the cause is "profoundly moral. " After the Geneva C onference , two million refugees fled from Ho Chi Minn , not only because they wanted to live under a Catholic ruler , but also because of Ho 's terror squads . In the past decade , the Vletcong have assassinated fifty thousand South Vietnamese villagers , kidnapped tens of thousands of youth s, and torture d , killed or maimed thou sands of city dwellers. W hat more justification do you need for war? You have a choice. Either you oppose the killing of terror ists an d assass ins or you must not oppose the killing of innocent people. The war does have its Immoral aspects — really, far-reaching mista kes, but to satisfy some, I shall call them immoral — which have been pointed out in a recentl y published book , NO EXI T FROM VIETNAM , by Sir Robert Thompson . Thompson , Br itish leader of the counter-in sur gency forces against Sukarno In Malyasia , makes a case for an abandonment of our emphasis on open militar y operation s in Vietnam , in favor of counter Insurgency operations. In fact , MAROON AND GOLD " VOL. XLVH I Mq. 11 Mlehetl Hock IdltorJifChlef Business Mana ger Mana ging Editor News Editor Co-Peature Idifors Sport s idltor Pho t ogra ph y Idl t or Copy Idltor Circulation Mana ger Advisor dor Remsen Bill TeJtsworth Michael Hook Olnny Pott er Allen Maur er Clark Rush Jim Blrt Kath y Roarty Pam Van Ippe Mr. Micha el Stanle y ADDIT IONAL 8TAPP: Ter ry Blast , Leonard House , Janice Qrtowsky, Janlc * Schkideler , Dave Keller / Velma Avery, John Stugjrln, Tom Punk , Bob Schultx. All opinion s expressed by columnists and feature writers , Includin g letters *to*the editor , *n not necessarily those *of 'His publication but those of the Individual!. a ««n of sdtf#Mn!$£ ' . Thom pson explains that our strategy so far has been almost entirely erroneous. The Vletcon g can seem to be losing militaril y, but as long as their underground political operations remain Intact and In contact with infiltrators and guerilla units, they are still winning. Our military leaders have never fought a war like the Vietname se War. They are inefficient and often the dupes of the Vletcong. For example , ' Vietcong have opened fire then retreate d, causing American soldiers to fire in populated areas. Also, many of . the militar y officers > are intereste d mere in i mme di ate fame for themselves instead of the long range objectives of the war. We have unwit tingly let our supplies be devoured by the black market , indirectly run by the Vietcong. Of course , things like this happen in all wars. Furthermore , the inadequacies of American militar y oper ations in Vietnam have liberal been magnified by the media here at home . ¦ For the first time , also, war is brought into the American living room . H owever , despite the ugliness of war , Thompson supports the A mer ican cause in Vietnam as , necessar y for the ultimate sur vival of the free worl d. His suggestion f or more effect ive war fare is a stron ger , more coordinated effort between ourselves and the South Vietnamese with priorit y given to intelli gence operations and with the Vietcong By Rick Fitch under gro und and its link with Chicago — (CPS) — The first Guerrillas and infiltrators as hint came on the air port bus the prime targets . Graduall y, Wednesday afternoon riding into the government of South Viet- the Loop. Mixed in amon g the nam and the population would be grey -suited businessmen were free from terror and would be- several obvious ly not headed for come much more stable. Few- the Holiday Inn or the Conrad er and fewer A mer ican men an d Hilton. They wore jean s, heavy dollars would be needed . The i)oots and arm y jackets and car war would still be a long haul , ried sleeping bags and motorbut the price would be much cycle helmets. And some were less. Thompson explains it much girls! Their faces re mained better than I do. transfixed in rigid silence , even WE MUST WIN when the bus passed a sign readThis is a war we must win. ing. "Welcome to Chicago — Mr. McLaughlin says that we Richard J. Daley, Mayor. '* must "question anew the longA second hint came during a term pra ctical 'advanta ges' for walk along the Lake Mi chigan the U.S.A . in being involved in shore that evening in the vicinity the Asian land war. " Such ques- of Lincoln Park. It was cool, tioning should have taken place dark and refreshin g. Wh ere was before we committed our troops . the revolution ? The forms of a Now we can only question the 'ad- dozen or so persons became vanta ges' of pulling out. Thou- visible 100 yards down the beach. sands ol those who resisted the • Running. Closer inspection reVietcong would be slaughtered. vealed all were attired in the Can we betray those South Viet- aforement ioned get-u p. Some had namese who were our willing, wooden clubs; one carrie d a Viet act ive collaborators? Wh at about Cong F lag. Their helmeted heads a commitment to the majority bobbed quietly past , and up and of the people of this countr y who over a highway footbridge leading support the war effort? Have their to the city. taxes been spent needlessly, but BRING THE WAR HOME most I mp ortant , have the lives No more hints were necessary . of the ir young men been given . Conclusive proof that a new sort in vain? On the more practical of ra dical had surfaced for "bring side , a vast re-al ignment of na- the war home " demonstrat ions tions would occur. In case of here October 8-11 was to follow. a Third World War , nations will Three days , 200 arrests , 80 lnbe concerned not with freedom , jiu les and 2 ,500 National Guard but survival. "Bette r dead than troo ps later , people would wonder Red *' is a nice phr ase as Io"hg if the new radical s ' emergency as you ar e comfy and cozy In foreshadowed future directions j the arms of another nat ion which of the U.S. protest movement , or 'is not Red. What happens when if everything had been stopped you can no longer depend on that then and there In Chicago . protect ion? If we lose, we will A brief account of the events relin qulst our leaders hip of the follows: free worl d, China and Russia will Wednesday - 10:30p .m., aome be only too glad to take over. 300 rock -throwin gdemon strators How free would the free world chanting "off the pig," spil out be then? of a Linc oln Park rally into Gold SELLING OUT Coast and Old Town sections of . . . , hj \ You Say You Want A R evolution Mr. P orter suggests we "bribe " the Communist Vietna * mese. How many more small C ommunist conspirac ies are going to want In on the deal, and how long will the Communists be satisfied with a measly one billion dollars? The late Ho Chi Minn and his follower s can hard * ly be compared to Tito, In this case, "selling out " would no longer be a figure of speech. Mr. Porter Is right , however , when he states that If we did not want to oommit our men and money we should never h ave entered the war. This is no We longer a consideration. have entered the war and can not afford to pile mistake upon mistake . Anyway, we either fight Vietnam today or someplace else tomorrow , maybe In the United States. As long as the free world Is to rema in f ree , the United States must , unfortunatel y, play the role of policeman , Peace sounds good, but it is all too often a coward 's wa y out. We must measure peace, not by the absence of military warfare only; we must measure peace also In terms of the freedom It provides, Sally Fre eman the city 's Near North Side , breaking hundreds of windows , damag * ing luxur y cars and engaging police in several free-for-alls as they go. At 11:15 , the action subsides. Seventy-live arrested , 18 injured , including 10 police and three pr otestors wounded by gunshot. Thursday — 10:30 a.m., 100 women asse mble In Grant Park , battleground of the 1968 Democrat ic C onvent ion di sor ders , begin marching to military induc tion center downtown. Are halted by police demanding they sur ren der clubs and helmets. Shout * ing, "Pi gs , pigs," women char ge police line of 25. Fifty more po-~ lice arrive , women subdued. Eleven arrested , five police Injure d. Noon, 300 attend peaceful ra lly outside federal Building , where "Chic ago 8" are under going trial. Protest incarceration of political prisoners. 3 p.m., 200 rall y on lawn adjacent to Internat ional Harvester plant to protest its closing. Illinois Gov. Richard Ogilvie calls out the National Guard. Daley calls for those arrested to be charged with felonies. 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Huskies Spoil MSC Homecom ing Defense Pulls Game Saving Play r"^i8 ^'^8i8m* ^^^ ;is w a»i^ i».JiiM iLtiawww p«ppiiiiii«i»»w ^g^^ »"^^™^^ ¦" ¦" »" '' —»»•"————— — ftob Warner Heads Downfield With the help of a great effort by the BSC defensive line the Huskies chalked up their first victory of the year by a score of 14 to 7 at the expense of Millersville State College. The defensive demons of the line stopped fiie Marauders cold twice with in a foot of the MSC goal line . The Huskies combined a potent offense with a defense that could make the "Big Play " , to register their first victory of 1969 . BSC Scores First The tempo of the game was set by the first offensive play from scrimmage. Millersville Halfback Carl Borst fumbled the handoff from quarterback Steve Lennox , and BSC's alert mon* sterman J ohn Stutzman pounced on the loose ball to give BSC a first down on the Millersville 29. Alter three runnin g play s netted a first down, Huskie quarter * back Tom Schneider dropped back and fired a bullet to Bob Warn- . er who scrambled 19 yards for the games firs t score . Ernie Vedrals extra point attempt was good , and the Huskies led 7-0 . Hot-Potatoe Football The remainder of the first period pro ved to be an exercise in inept football handling as both teams fumbled away the ball a total of f our t imes. Also during that perio d , BSC defensive halfback Hugh Jones picked off a Lennox aer ial , but the Huskies could not take advanta ge of the break . Midway through the 2nd quarter , MSC took possession at the BSC 43. They dro ve into the Bloomsbur g end-zone to tie the score ai. 7 to 7. Before the half • ended , Bloomsbur g had a first down on the MSC 9 ; however the Marauder defense held , and Ved* ral' s fieldgoal attempt was just wide of its mark. The half ended with a 7-7 tie . Ber ger Romps For Final Score Midway through the * third Well Done Huskies GOODWILL STORE 154 W. Main , Bloomsbur g SHOP AT GOODWILL FOR YOUR CLOTHING AND SAVE YOUR MONEY FOR OTHER THINGS Charlie 's PIZZA & BOOKS.. . HOAGIES Open 'til 12.00 p.m. Clotod 1:30 to 3t00 p.m. Every Day Bur Friday OVER 80O0 TITLES IN STOCK Greeting Cards HENRIE'S Card and Book Nook I I ' 40 W. Main St, ¦ ¦ ¦ * Gred Berger Gets Hit fore the game were thought un- the last two games, a good sea* reachable . The outlook for the son could be salvaged from what , three remaini ng games is good. otherwise would have been a disIf Bloomsburg playes the same aster . brand of football that they have in Oops . . . .! YOUR DOLL AR BUYS MORE AT A If l< • • book we have it or wo can got It stanza BSC sophomore defensive back Steve Myer s intercepted a Marauder pass and carried it to the MSC 25. A 15 yd . penalty on the Huskies set the ball back to the Millersville 45. Bob Warner cracked the line for 3 yds . Then Schneider connected with Greg Ber ger who showed several great moves to the MSC defensive backs and romped 42 yards for a touch * down. Vedra l's P .A.T . was again true in its course , and the Huskies led 14-7 . Several series of plays later the Huskies were faced with a fourth down on their own 11-yard line . Dan Stellfox's punt bounced off a teammate 's helmet and was blown dead on the Husky 35. Moving the ball well in the air and on the ground the Marauders soon had a first-and-goal at the Husky five. It was then that the fearsome seven, who play defensive line on the Husky goal line defensive , pulled off what could have been the greatest play of their careers . With third down and the ball less than a foot from the goal line , the defensive demons stopped Tom Ershaw' s third strai ght attem pt to score . Then with tlie ball a matter of centimeters away from touchdownland , Ershaw was again stopped to complete one of the greatest efforts by a Husky team ever . Hopes High Now This win hopefully will set off the Huskies to heights which be- I ! PRII DILIVM Y 5 to 7 8i30fo11i30 Regular and King Slie HOAGIIS Phone 784-4292 127 W. Main BLOOMSBURG METS (continued fr om page 7) been accomplished by one of the finest of the manv erp at team* that have played In New York . The Jokers have come of age and are now the kings of baseball. Long live the king! The. dynasty has begun. r1""1— "fBifsTUDio shop *"~ ! I M E. Main St ... lor your pmoul Mad. is _ _ ^^ ^WI •¦> jE VvoWB NESPOLI jewelers i Fine Jewelry and Watch Repair _ _ _ ^ _ _^ . ^^ ^c f t •nu/'WSsHP ^uj ^¦Mm ^PTT# ^ ^ t^—^^ . 1 I ,^^»^^ »»_ .^•^^ ^ • •^¦l _ Please... Terry and Dave open Mon-Sat 8-Si30 Closed Wed. E. Main St., Bloomtburg WHERE DAD TOOK HIS GIRL Bloomiburg _ J oin The M&G WELLY'S BARBER SHOP The \ Texts \ ; If I. Mobi St., ilOOMMUlO _ | . . . the Going is rough. _ _ _ _ i Cut the way you Want Cheyney Blitzed Is-So by Dave Kelter For the second meet in a row the BSC Cross country squad has blitzed out their oppone nt: in this case the annihilatio n of Cheyney State College . Winning the meet with a perfect score of 15 to 50 the Huskies contin ue to destroy their opponents in a quest toward taking the state championships . Bloom took first place through 11th placer in their destruction of Cheyney on Sat. The placings were: first —Terry Lee. in a new course record of >27 minutes 37 seconds , secondTim Waechter (former record holder), third — the just-returned Paul Pelletier in his first meet of the season , fourth-Bob Betzinger , fifth-Larry Strohl , sixth- Mike DuFrayne , seventh Scott R ogers , eighth -Charlie Graham , ninth-Dave Kelter , tenth Rich Echersly , and 11th — Mike Herbal . Coach Nobel had sees great improvement in the huskies since his original prediction of a 4 presse d interest in having Dave and 7 season . The Harriers sign a pro -contract . The Expos, now have a 5 and 2 record and who are hurting for left-handed plan for that to change to a 9 pitchers in their minor league and 2 record before taking on system , were willing to sign Dave West Chester and Lock Haven on the spot . At that time. Dave in the championships . The next wante d to finish college before kill will be Kutztown on Wedgoing on to pro ball, but now, nesday and another slaughter is expected. after living baseball for the summer , Dave would be willing to sign next summer when he turns more sociable. London is an " in21. The only stipulation to the surance city, and where there are .. deal . would be that a sizeable insurance companies, th ere are bonus be off ered to encourage him secretar ies . Mini-skirted secre * to leave college. tar ies. This pleasant scenery Dave would like to play for the distracted Dave and had him Cincinnati Reds , but he has been walking into telephone poles . inform ed that Pittsburgh would What A Riot ! draft him in this years freeThe game Dave most rememagent selections . He would have bers was really a riot. It all a solid chance In the Cincinnati starte d when one of Dave's team * or ganization because of the low opposing mates dusted off the class of the current Reds pitch * ing staff . About the only team that batter . On the next pitch , this he wouldn't sign with is the New batter heaved the bat at the pitch * York Mets. Mainly because the er . At this , both benches emptyed onto the field for a happy free-for Mets' minor league organization -all which had the riot police on is rich In young pitchers . the field. When Dave joined the Back For 1970 melee , he was immediately This season, Dave will be pitchgrabbed by the rather lar ge op* ing for the Huskies . To him , posing man ager . "This is it , Bloomsbur g is the team to beat m dead " he thou ght. But when , I ' in the Pennsylvania Conference . the old man swung at Dave, he The entire team with the excep. by at least missed a foot . "Just tion of one grad uated senior who g sw i n at me the mana ger said , ," played very little in 1969 will be "th e crowd loves it." back for the 1970 campaign . This Despite his small size , and his year, Freshmen are eligible for the varsit y team . And coach Boler love for the number 13, Dave is one of the best prospects to ever has recruite d 28 boys for his come out of the North-Eastern team. This could be the year of Pennsylvania re gion. With the the baseball Huskies . ri ght trainingand experience , and Next year Dave will not be goa touch of luck he could become , ing back to London because of the good major league pitcher . a field courses he must take at BSC . He will probably play his 1970 summer baseball for North Berwick , in the local Tri- County League. Canada was quite a bit different to Dave from the United 8tates . Life is carried on at a slower pace, and the people are much Dave Moharter BSC Super-Southpaw By CLARK RUCH Sunday night I talked to Dave Moharter , BSC' s star southpaw pitcher . We discussed his summer in Canada pitching for the London P ontiacs . With a pitcher of M oe's calibre attending BSC , and coupled with the fact that as great as he is ver y few students know of him, the Maroon & Gold is publishing the following interview . It all started back in May, 1969, when a scout from the St . Louis Cardinals contacted Dave about pitching in Canada f or the summer. At first Dave was apprehensive about the opportunity , but later he decided that this would be a worthwhi le experience in further ing his base ball career. On May 31, Dave flew to Tor onto and later that day pitched his first game for the * Pontiacs . In 'his first appe arance , he worked five innin gs striking out ten bat ters , and in his own opinion , he consider ed it his best performance of the summer . The Pontiacs played a 28 game schedule not Including the playoffs. With the help of Dave's 8-1 recor d, the Pontiacs won the re gular season schedule with a 23*5 record. This league is set up in such a way that the players are given a job and can play several games a week . There are no formal major league affiliations , no contracts signed, and therefore all player s are considered amateurs . In the playoff s, the Pontiacs won the semifinal round in four strai ght games . In the finals, they took th e first three , dropped the second three and won the seventh and deciding game to win the league championshi p. Majors Interested Durin g (tie season , the Detroit Tigers and Montreal Expos ex- YMCA \ new Interviewin g for posl* tlons In Yeuth Work Business, end Phyileil Idvoitlon, Counselin g. Cell L WILLIAM OLARK, District YMCA IxceuHve for •ppolntmtnt 714.1104 I Overseas I . and Positions In U, I I Mil Ur Office r^ BLOOM BOWL e -^ WAFFL E GRILL E I Suppl y Co. 18 West Main Street Fsych Out A Human Relations Game A game about the games people play has been designed by th ree students at Michigan State Univers ity. Psych-Out: a Game of Human Relations, is the brainchild of J onathan C ooper, former MSU student and now a graduate student at the Univer sity of West Virgini a. Cooper turn ed in a rough form of the game as a project for a Michigan State . undergraduate psychology course in fall 1967. The Psych-Out game boar d has three concentric tracks which surroun d the goal. Four to six players try to move from the outermost trac k to the cent er. Along the way, players draw Tranquility Cards and Anxiety cards. These outline experien ces* encountere d in datin g, friendship and family relations . The player who draws the card must construct a story from the out * line. The other must "psych out " the stor yteller and decide if his story is fact or fiction. ? "The game is really pretty Freudian , in that it can bring out some ugly things about people," James J. Moriarty , one of the designers , said "Jonathan A Fantast ic Team Mets Take Series As Cleon Jones grabbed the fly ball off the bat of Brooks Robinson , the cheers of the hundred or so fans gathered in the book store lounge could be heard throughout the building . The Amazing New York Mets had beaten the Baltimore Orioles for the world cham pionship and people all over the country were going wild. The 100 to 1 shots in April had completed the most fantast ic season in the history of baseball. Early in August the Mets were trailing the Chicago Cubs by 9^ games. They then went on a tear to w.in 37 of their last 48 games to beat the Cubs by 8 full games. Never before had a major league baseball team come from sufar b ack, so late in the season to win the pennant . Leave It To Seaver The Mets cham pionship year was truly a team victory , heral ded mostly by the emergence of 25 game winner Tom Seaver as the premier pitcher in the National League . In only his third year as a major leaguer , Seaver is being compared to the all-time greats of the baseball wnrM . Another steUar perfo rmer , Cleon Jone s, rose to the top as one of the senior circui ts finest I See our llngtrie from I I I I Duchess Warner Deena EUOORA'S I CORSET SHOP 111. Msln St. Bloomsburg I I HALLMARK CARDS OIPTS I 784-2961, hitters , with a .338 avera ge, good for third In the league . C leon's timely basehits and solid fielding make him a prim e candidate for the Most Valuable Player Award in the National league alon g with Seaver and his outfield partner , Tommle Agee, The speedy but powerful Agev. drove in 76 runs from the lead off position in the batt ing order . This amount of RBI s plus his 26 homeruns make him one of the most dangerous leadoff batters in baseball. The list for stardom could go on endlessly: 17 game winner Jerry Koosman , shot gun-armed J erry Grote, slick-fielding Bud Harrelson , and late-commer Ken Boswell, who hit over .400 In the Mets run for the pennant . It was a tre mendous year for a fantastic team . Who would have guessed last June , when the M ets were In last place that they would win the series. It was an impossible dr eam that could have only (continued on page six)' ¦COME IN & BROWSE BLOOMSBURG,PA. Phone (Cooper) and I don't really feel that way now; I guess it' s what we were interested in then. If we made up a new game, it would be more positive. The game was designed to resemble actual life as closely as possible. Moriary said. The frustration and anger and pleasure are all felt in real life in the same situatio ns that occur in Psych-Out. Moriary and Cooper are try ing to sell Psych-Out to a game manufacturer at present . The two do not antici pate becomin g millionaires from the sales of the game. Moriarty said that he and Cooper would receive only 10 cents for each game sold , if a manufacturer buys it. Psych-Out has uses other than enterta inment. It has been used in an experimental psychology class and could be used in grou p thera py and sensitivit y gr oups, Moriarty said. ••But it's not a game for everyone," he added . "People who are IJ ptight ' have played it, and they don't come back to play a second time. It 's a terr ific game for an icebreaker on blind dates, though. " I MOVER Pharmacy Your Protcrfpf/on Druggttt ROBERT G.SHIVE,HP. Free PrescriptionDe//vory TOILET GOOOS COSMETICS RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES GREETING CARDS 1West Main St. Phone. 7S4-43S8 BLOOMSBURG, PA. ALL YOU CAN EAT .«¦ LUNCHION smb HOLIDAY 1UFFIT ¦ TUESDAY thru FRIDAY EACH SUNDAY I Every We«k-11,30-1,30 11,30- 2.30 ¦ Children — $1JI ¦ — ON OUI 1MIPIOOI — I I I I I I I JHOTEL MAGEE /Bloomsburg , Pal f s VU f/to p oiet ^ (conHnutd frtHn p.*. thr *) game, Abbie^aald, "We're going to win every day but the last. " Renee Davis offered his respect for the judge: /'He's a fool . They really brou ght up the best man for this one." Abbie added , "He's strai ght out of Central Castin g." The defendants have spent a good deal of their time opening mail. Each defendant has been avera ging 50 pieces of mail a day . Abb iehas also been reading " Zat " comics in the court AWS At the ARW open constitution meeting on Thursday , October 16, It was proposed and discussed to combine the ARW (Association of Resident Women) with the com. muter women students to for m the Association of Women Students, A final decision on the matter was postponed until the opinions of the involved students can be voiced. Any students who are opposed to or in favor of the combination should express their opinion to their officers or advisors. room. "We 're gettin g more mail than Perry Como ," Hoffman (Abbie) said . "I even got a letter from my ex-wife , and she's going to help. " Jerr y Rubin said he didn 't expect a mistrial to be called , but expected the tri al to last three years in appeal . Davis was not so optimistic : "This judge is going to see this right to the. end. He ' s going to get crazier and crazier . He'll probably start cross examining us himself . So we're working on stopping the trial ; we'll focus our reasonin g on the judge ." Blai6 Ref lects ( continued from page ihree ) vetoed on the ground s that they had the right to th eir opinion, but not the right to VOICE it. It 's jus t some of the reaction to the Moratorium that makes It seeme d like me wonder. Bloomsburg town was convinced the friendly college on the hill had turne d Communist and was about to initiate step number 1 in overt hrowing local and nat ional government . Wh ew. APATHY STINKS That's about it , draw your own conclusions. I hoped I've reac hed a few people , that I 've chan ged a few heads into ac ti on. (I mean , when as little as we did is considered Red-inspired , then the time s are more trou bled than I thou ght.) I can only say that I tried apathy and it stinks; that all war is wrong, morall y, humanly , religiously; that I'd like to praise student activists Sanders , Ed , J anice and the rest for the fine job , a 23-hour vigil of "symbolic protest ." To the Indifferent slobs , well, next time I hope to be in Wash ington to make up for my inBut a act ivity on the 15th. word of advice anyhow : don't be like an apathetic beaver; give a dam. T o my detractors, be they P entagon, veterans, or just plain Blue Meanies , right up to Tricky Dicky himself , a final word. Lenny Bruce said It once , that the There are no amendments. That final word? Peace. Black Capitalis m the high quali ty of life in Ameri - do anything you want , if you try ^ ca has developed . hard enough ." But , in the case of the black We*re trying hard enough, and enter preneur , his effort to de- we're not asking for money,only (continue d from page om) velop, effort to develop economic a license to do better than we've by providing equal opportunities resources fail...not because of been doing . The time has come when the to b lack businessmen to become lack of energy , time and effort , more active in the free enter - but because of the unyielding power struct ure should put up or pressures of raci al discrimation shut up. prise system of America. exerc ised by the power struc The black busines s community There is an estimated twentyhas been economically anemic ture. M any feder al regulatory agen - five million black people in thi s because of lack of resources to shape its own destiny ...and be- cies , which have the power to country and not one single black cause of the unwill ingness of the grant authority allowing the truck ing company with authori ty p ower structure to give it the growth and exp ansion of business to serve the total black comtools by which to develop those enter prises, have bullUn re- munity. strictions which hmlt the black resources. We have documented evidence , M oney is not the only resource businessman 's entr y into the nathat the white local agents of the for business development and tional business . Time and time again , the black lar ge whit e national carriers are growth. The free enterprise system has commun ity has been forced to not willing to come into the been founded on initiative , in- listen to shop - worn terms such black ghetto to give service, dustry , talent and ideas of Indi - as '•pulling yourself up by the hence violating the ICC regu viduals whose Investment of pa- bootstraps," you people are go- lations by denying service to the tience, time and effort alone ing to have to be more responsi- public. ble , and last but not least , We will not deny service to yielded the dollar profit...the "th is Is a free country; you can anyone. " sound economic base from which ' Harry Loga n Fin e J ewelry COLLEY BARBER SHOP AND Repairing Mon, ^ Tues. , o _, 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Thurs. > [ Sat. Fri. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Closed Wednesday Your J iwtUr Away from Horn * 5 W. Main St. I reasonably prietd 486 W. MAIN ST ^^—.^^^^^^^^^ Pi s Strike ¦M ^Ba ^* ^ Epple/s Pharmacy Bloom sburo I ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^aBBBB^B^^^^BBBB^^B pBBBBBJ^Bp^^BJBJBB ^P Be fashio nable n CAMPUS CLEANERS 124 E. Mai n St . At Your Service '"Shirt s professionally laundere d *Sanitone Dry Cleaning ^Re pairing and Alteration s on Premi se* * I • CHANEL • 0UHIAIN • FA1KGI • IANVIN • PRINCE MATCHAMllI I , | j • ELIZAIETH AIDIN ' • 0ANA i • HILINA IUUNSTIIK * • corr • MAX FACTOR I I I I I I I I Compliments of HELP 3 | I I I I II I I I I REA & DERICK , Inc. "Stores of Sorvico " | ||H I II | | I I | I I I I || | I I| I I II I I I | I I I 11Jl I iiiill ' ill | I | I I I I I |||I I I I || I | I | I I I I I I | I I | I I I | I I||| I I| ¦" I Ill' iJill " Jin ml "' I IH j I li Mllll ill II "' • h II Rk !I iMi II h Illl Nil hi I iimiiinliiHilhillilliliiiiilliHilitllillillirf Jet. of Route £L aad Interstat eto Exit 36 OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT FRI. & SAT. Sundays & Daily — 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. We Invite You To Dine With Us Everyday and Sundays Too I Prescription Spec/of/tf ( (continued from page three) credit , and over $4,000 additional cash for printin g costs. The crisis occurred when the Student Government cut the newspaper budget by -17,000, more than half of the $39,000 they had asked for , and mer it scholarshi ps were dropped for staff members . "It' s just notfunanymorewhen you spend 80 hours a week up here and get dldley, " said Sports Editor Jerry Gruebel . The $9,« 000 will be divided up to pay for the editors and business staff tuitions as well as for some reporte rs ' stor ies. This , the MEWS feels , will improve the paper quantitaand "qualitatively tively. " Students will also receive one cre dit each semester for working on the PITT NEWS and participating in a journalism seminar. Staff morale , however , still remains a problem . "You rea lly wonder who cares if the paper ever comes out again /' said Editor Dave Tiernan . THE (I rc us ' We Ai m To Pkast MAIN ft UON fTtllTS shop AT Clnd.6 CONFUSED ? DOUBTS? FEARS, Try Your Radio Week Days 1.570 AM or 96.7 FM at 9il5 A.M. Chester , WVCH 740 KC at lOi 15 A.M. Lancaster , WDAC-FM , 94.5 Me. 7tQ0 A.M. Mtmtrose , 1280 KC. or 96 .5 Me. 9s4S A.M. Mr. Jo hn D. J«m may have th e answer. Courtesy, Win. lumen I We Cater To Everyone and Serve Only Choice CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS CHOPS, BEEF-BURGERS SANDWICHES & SALADS Phone 784-7837 pAUL DlETER, Pr op,